Following is an article published in Down to Earth in March 2000.
It highlights key issues in global environmental politics and is a backdrop to the state
of negotiations today Is your
government signing away your future rights to the worlds natural resources?
Its
official. Bill Clinton will not be coming to India to discuss the nuclear issue, or the
Indo-Pak issue. Environment and energy will top his list of priorities. This may come as a
surprise to Indian politicos, who consider this a soft agenda. But Clinton
will be addressing an issue that is currently the biggest economic threat to his country.
The US has its back against the wall at international negotiations to control climate
change. There are only two options: either reduce domestic consumption of fossil fuels
drastically at huge costs or convince developing countries such as India to provide them
with the cheaper option of emissions trading.
Because emissions trading with developing
countries like India will cost the US almost 95 per cent less than the domestic option,
Clinton will have good reason to try and convince Indians that emissions trading is the
best thing that could happen to them (see graph: Cheap trick). If developing
countries agree, the US couldnt have it better. US companies get to sell US their
technology, the US gets off the hook at the climate negotiations, and gets the
right to carry on polluting at home (see
page 34). But what happens to global warming, and to developing countries once all
the cheap options are gone, and the pressure is on them to reduce emissions of greenhouse
gases (GHG)?
Cheap trick
Emissions reduction costs for industrialised
countries will dip if developing countries submit |
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NOTE:
CDM Clean Development Mechanism |
That the US views climate change as a very serious threat
to its economy was always apparent. The US state department deals with the issue, and no
less than 200 people laboured over the countrys strategies for the Kyoto
negotiations in 1997. Contrast this with the Indian situation, where climate change is an
even bigger threat. There is strong evidence now to suggest that there will be increased
incidents of drought and floods in the country due to global warming. Sea level rise in
Bangladesh and the Maldives will result in a huge influx of refugees into India. Yet, we
have only one officer of the Indian government spending a third of his time preparing the
countrys strategy at the climate talks. The Indian cabinet has never even discussed
global warming.
What the world is seeing today is, in fact, a process of
ecological globalisation accompanying economic globalisation. Just as the
developing countries have to be careful of the rules to which they commit in international
economic negotiations, they have to be careful of commitments they make in global
environmental negotiations. This is particularly so when it comes to the sharing of
global commons such as the oceans and the atmosphere. Taking environmental
negotiations lightly now could prove disastrous for our future generations.
The Centre for Science and Environments (CSEs)
Global Environmental Negotiations (GEN) reports are an effort to record and analyse how
developing countries have fared so far with ecological globalisation. They also seek to
provide the civil society, often removed from the scene of these international
negotiations, the information they need to intervene to ensure that the rules that are set
are democratic and just to both rich and poor nations. The first report, Green Politics,
analyses three post-Rio conventions, four ongoing negotiations, and two environmental
institutions.
Major findings
What we see emerging in the name of
global environmental negotiations is actually an extremely lopsided governance of the
worlds resources, controlled and manipulated by Northern countries. Only Northern
concerns are taken on board, whether it is the hole in the ozone layer which was found to
cause cancer particularly to white skin, or the problem of persistent organic pollutants
(POPs) travelling to the Arctic.
While the treaties dealing with Northern problems,
namely the Montreal Protocol and the negotiations on POPs have been put on track in record
time, treaties on biological diversity and desertification, which deal with problems in
developing countries, have stalled. Both Northern governments and non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) have shown a marked lack of interest in them. Even with global
warming, there is more hype on part of the North than a desire to do something concrete.
This is because it is clear that developing countries will suffer great damage due to
climate change, and there is strong doubt that industrialised countries will be affected
very much at all.
No political leader has any interest to ensure that the emerging
global market or the emerging global ecological policy is managed in the best interest of
the maximum number of people and on the basis of the principles of good
governance equality, justice and democracy. Instead, when leaders of nation
states meet to develop rules and regulations for ecological globalisation, they take
positions to ensure least possible costs to their individual national economies.
Environmental diplomacy has turned into petty business transactions, not the establishment
of fair and just global governance systems.
In a highly divided world, getting the nations together to deal
with their environmental challenges means rich nations will have to provide good
leadership, which generates confidence not just within their own populations but also in
the populations of poor nations. In this context, the role of rich countries will be of
immense importance in the years to come particularly the role of the US, the
richest of the rich. But the US Senate has not yet ratified the Convention to Combat
Desertification, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the un Conference on the Law of
the Sea and the Basel Convention. The European Union and other industrialised countries
invariably tend to hide behind usintransigence.
Southern political leaders have also shown a miserable lack of
vision and failure to recognise that these environmental treaties are about the
sustainable sharing of the Earths ecological space global public goods like
oceans and atmosphere on which national economies depend. What matters most is not
aid or technology transfer but rights to the equitable sharing of the Earths
ecological commons. These rights will be the precondition to generate long-term
sustainability through appropriate changes in the worlds economic and technological
systems.
Unfortunately, destitute economies also produce political
leaders with the mind-set of the destitute who are willing to discount their future for a
few dollars today, while rich economies produce political leaders who are nothing but
handmaidens of their business interests.
Current international environmental treaties provide for action
in increments. In other words, each treaty is evolving over the years. This approach has
been highly praised by a number of experts on global environmental negotiations. But
incremental action poses a serious challenge for diplomats from the developing world. At
no stage of a treaty do they have a full and final picture of its implications and
impacts. As industrialised countries usually take the lead in implementing an
environmental treaty, the action framework is usually set in a way that is acceptable to
them. Once the framework is set, developing countries are expected to join the effort,
though the same framework may not be appropriate for them.
Southern countries, therefore, have to intervene from the
very start of the negotiations to ensure that the action framework will be acceptable to
them later on. Unfortunately, given the state of distrust among nations, the efforts of
developing countries to participate in setting of rules is often seen as obstructionist.
Almost all environmental treaties use trade sanctions as a tool
for bringing the environmentally-deviant states to book. Western environmentalists have
had no hesitation in pushing for the use of both aid and trade sanctions as a compliance
mechanism even outside the ambit of the environmental treaties. CSE has pointed out since
the early 1990s that there are fundamental flaws in using aid or trade as tools for
controlling errant environmental behaviour even in multilateral treaties. These are
extremely unjust tools because they can only be used by more the powerful nations against
the less powerful ones. Imagine the impact of Maldives or Bangladesh imposing trade
sanctions against the US for not meeting its Kyoto Protocol targets! An international
compliance tool has to be such that it is equally available to all parties rich or
poor, powerful or powerless. Otherwise, the world is only accepting the right of powerful
nations to be moral bullies whenever they choose to be so. It is disheartening that
Northern NGOs also support the use of such inequitous and one-sided tools.
Already, there is talk that there is no need for a
compliance system for the Kyoto Protocol because all countries will want to follow the
rules. Then why is there need for compliance measures under the other conventions where
poor countries are likely to default?
Finally, Southern countries cannot depend on Northern NGOs to
push their interests at these environmental negotiations. This is evident from the
response of Northern groups to Southern demands for equity in the climate convention,
which have been met with nothing but stony silence.
Challenges ahead Though Western civil society and public
concern have largely driven the global green agenda, governments have taken over the
business in the post-Rio dynamics. The civil society, which led governments to take action
in Rio, has since then merely followed the inaction of the governments. This
"governmentalisation" of the environmental agenda is proving to be disastrous as
it has become a cause without a concern. Hardly any treaty signed in Rio or thereafter has
been implemented with any seriousness. Agenda 21 Rios plan of action
has almost become a dead document. Any discussion, particularly one with any trace of
idealism, is quickly suppressed as inimical to the all-embracing quagmire of bureaucratic
and economic pragmatism.
To change this state of affairs, the civil society
both of the North and of the South has to show courage and develop the ability to
keep governments accountable and responsive.
"Will
it be a world of unilateralism, where the strong may impose their will upon the weak, or
will it be a negotiated order in which all nations great and small...
participate?"
FRANK
BIERMANN, Harvard University
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